PRINT  Print   SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWS our News    FORWARD TO A FRIEND forward to a Friend       

Top Health News

 

W.A. Butch Shrader, M.D., board member American Academy of Environmental Medicine - AAEM

Dr. Butch Shrader is a physician board certified by the American Board of Environmental Medicine, and a Past President and Fellow of the American Academy of Environmental Medicine (AAEM), now serving on the AAEM Board of Directors.  Dr. Shrader treats environmental illnesses and allergy with modalities such as nutritional therapy (oral and IV), dietary therapy and many others, and employs IV therapy for detoxification when necessary at the Santa Fe Center for Allergy & Environmental Medicine is located in the picturesque city of Santa Fe, New Mexico. At the Santa Fe Center, Dr. Shrader treats many illnesses related to patients' interaction with the environment. Dr. Shrader is a member of the AAHF and has a long-standing commitment to healthcare freedom both for himself as a practitioner who takes an integrative approach to his patients' health and for healthcare consumers in his practice who seek more than symptom care for their allergies and environmental illnesses.

Click Black Square to stop audio. 

 

AAEM

 

 



 

 


 



Other Articles of Interest:

 

 

ANH calls for new paradigm in healthcare. - 
Alert to all nutritional practitioners: Are you doing enough to protect your future? The British Medical Journals offshoot publication, Clinical Evidence, tells us that only 13% of medical treatments have been demonstrated to be of benefit. Even leading figures in the pharmaceutical industry would seem to agree. 
  >> Alliance for Natural Health >> Organization Reports >>
http://www.naturalhealthsciencenews.org/ANH_calls_for_new_paradigm_in_healthcare

Rigged Trials: Drug Studies Favor The Manufacturer. - 
If you have often suspected that drug studies are rigged by the pharmaceutical manufacturer, you are right. "Drug studies skewed toward study sponsors," reported The Washington Post. 
  >> Orthomolecular Medicine News Service >> Opinions & Editorials >>
http://www.naturalhealthsciencenews.org/ANH_calls_for_new_paradigm_in_healthcare

Vitamin D As Radiation Protection. - 
Radiological health expert Daniel Hayes, Ph.D., of the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene suggests that a form of vitamin D could be one of our body's main protections against damage from low levels of radiation. 
  >> Medical News Today >> News Stories >>
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/128693.php

Increases in imaging tests widespread: study. - 
Use of diagnostic imaging tests in the United States has increased across the board in recent years, with more patients getting the tests and more tests being ordered per patient, researchers said on Monday. 
  >> Reuters >> News Stories >>
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081110/hl_nm/us_imaging_costs/print;_ylt=Auvu.g7skGHrwRf2tTumfYcR.3QA

Heartbeats may power future pacemakers. - 
Pacemakers and defibrillators of the future may generate an extra power boost from a surprising energy source: The heart itself. Using a microgenerator powered by heartbeats, a British team said on Monday their experiment produced nearly 17 percent of the electricity needed to run an artificial pacemaker. 
  >> Reuters >> News Stories >>
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081110/hl_nm/us_heart_pacemaker/print;_ylt=Auvu.g7skGHrwRf2tTumfYcR.3QA

Low potassium linked to high blood pressure. - 
low potassium level in the urine correlated with high blood pressure, regardless of the level of salt (sodium) in the diet or cardiovascular risk factors. 
  >> Reuters >> News Stories >>
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081110/hl_nm/us_low_potassium/print;_ylt=Auvu.g7skGHrwRf2tTumfYcR.3QA

Vitamins C, E do not cut heart attack, stroke risk: study. - 
Neither vitamin C nor vitamin E supplements cuts the risk of cardiovascular disease including heart attack and stroke in a U.S. study published on Sunday.
And a second study failed to show that taking low-dose aspirin helped prevent heart and artery disease among Japanese people with diabetes. 
  >> Reuters >> News Stories >>
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081110/hl_nm/us_heart_vitamins/print;_ylt=Auvu.g7skGHrwRf2tTumfYcR.3QA

Heart Failure Hospitalizations Up Sharply. - 
Hospitalization rates for heart failure among older Americans have increased dramatically in the past three decades, an epidemic that represents a mounting burden on the health-care system. 
  >> Health Day News >> Scientific Studies >>
http://news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20081110/hl_hsn/heartfailurehospitalizationsupsharply;_ylt=AmWWoTzz62L00v3D79noV6m3j7AB

Active Young Women Need Calcium, Vitamin D. - 
Calcium and vitamin D supplements may do more than strengthen bones in older women. These vital nutrients may also help younger, active women reduce their risk of stress fractures. 
  >> Health Day News >> News Stories >>
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/news/fullstory_71398.html


 

 

 

Our Thanks to:   Alliance for Natural Health - USA

Alliance for Natural Health - USA
1350 Connecticut Ave, 5th Flr
Washington, DC 20036 

www.anh-usa.org

 

 Privacy Notice  -  2008 - 2009 ©  Natural Health Science News